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Ammonite movie posterI walked into Ammonite thinking I was going to enjoy it — and I wasn’t disappointed. I had my hopes up based purely on the cast; Kate Winslet, Saoirse Ronan, Gemma Jones, and Fiona Shaw. I don’t think I’ve seen anything with those actors in that I haven’t enjoyed, and they were all on top form.

So what is Ammonite about? Basically it’s about Mary Anning.

Who?

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If you’ve ever heard the tongue twister “She sells seashells on the seashore,” then you’ve heard of Mary Anning, possibly. They’re not 100% sure that the song was actually written about her, but I’m not one for letting awkward facts get in the way of a good story.

Mary Anning (1799-1847) was a collector and dealer of fossils, and a paleontologist with a specialism in Jurassic marine fauna. Well, she would have been if she hadn’t been a woman in the nineteenth century.

Not only was she a woman, but also she was a Dissenter and, as this was was when the CofE had some clout, that just made for two reasons why she couldn’t be part of the scientific community. She wasn’t allowed to join the Geological Society of London, despite regularly being consulted on anatomy, and the only writing of hers ever published was an extract from a letter to the Magazine of Natural History she sent in 1839, questioning the editor’s claims. It wasn’t until 2010 that she was included in a Royal Society list of the ten British Women to most influence science.

The Sea Shells are aren’t actually the point

But Ammonite isn’t really about paleontology; that is more of a co-starring role. What it is about is the relationship between Mary Anning (Kate Winslet) and Charlotte Murchison (Saoirse Ronan). Charlotte Murchison (1788-1869) was also a real person and they did meet and became close friends. Whether they became as close as the film states I don’t know, but there are parts of the story that are true.

So let’s stop beating about the bush. There is a lot of sex in Ammonite. Not hot, steamy, sweaty, naked sex — well, apart from a couple of times — but more of an eyes meeting, smoldering kind of sex. Take, for example, the brilliant Fiona Shaw. If you only know her as the fretful, harassed Petunia Dursley from the Harry Potter series, or of the vaguely psychotic spy master Carolyn Martens from Killing Eve, then her turn as the pharmacist Elizabeth Philpot will be a revelation. She is only in a couple of scenes but, almost from her first words, you know that she and Mary have history. And by history, I mean biology.

There is also a fine turn by Gemma Jones as Mary’s mother, Molly Anning, who has been beaten to the edge of madness by the travails of a hard life, and the sadly quite common experience of bearing ten children but only having two survive to adulthood.

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This app provides info about movies, reviews, ratings from people who have seen it before and after viewing. It has links to info about the movies. It let’s you know when there will be a lull in the action and how long it will last. If you want to know what happens during that time, you can check the brief synopsis (you have to click a link, so no accidental spoilers). It has a timer you can set (silent) to alert you to a break. It also tells you whether there is anything extra during or after the credits. It’s really a wonderful app. I’ve subscribed for a couple of years to support the developers, but I noticed some of the links to provide feedback didn’t seem to work today. They also made it free, with voluntary donations to see the pee-times. If you haven’t tried it, I encourage you to do so, and subscribe if you like it. I really hope the app is supported so it can continue to be maintained!

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It’s also about the setting

This is not a dialogue heavy film; you could probably get all the words on a couple of sheets of A4 paper. It is more an exercise in atmosphere. I’m not sure if it is lit in the same way as All Is True was, i.e. all natural light outdoors and candles indoors, but it certainly had that look about it. If you’ve ever been to one of those places where they recreate a village from the 1800s, then you’ll know what this feels and looks like.

Well worth getting back to the theater to see.

Grade: A-

About The Peetimes: This is not a ‘wordy’ film, so I tried to pick scenes that were easy to summarize.

There are no extra scenes during, or after, the end credits of Ammonite. (What we mean by Anything Extra.)

Rated (PG-13)
Genres: Biography, Drama, Romance

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Comments

4 responses to “New Movie Review – Ammonite”

  1. CofE …Church of England? IDK, just guessing. That’s like saying U of A here…could be Alabama, Arkansas, Arizona, or Alaska.

    I love fossils, shells, and paleontology. I even know what an Ammonite is. I almost got a Masters in this field. And if I could collect and sell shells I would. I love finding things.

    I’ll make an effort to see this one.

  2. Sorry, yes CofE is Church of England, That’s the side the Archbishop of Canterbury plays for.

    Aren’t you the all round polymath! A few of my friends took Geology/Geomorphology ‘A’ Level but I stuck with English; they were out rock knocking while I was trying to read Chaucer in Middle English.

    I’ve had a look and it’s due out in the USA on 13th November. I’ve no idea about Brazil but it’s nearly four weeks away, who knows what country you’ll be in by then!

  3. I love Science more than English. I just find writing easy. Polymath for sure. Like Hermione in Harry Potter. I may be a Gryffindor, but if I was placed in Ravenclaw, that would work too.

    I was the president of my Science Club at University. I always thought I would have been happy to do that for a living. I pulled together some amazing workshops. I’d pick a topic, and have a lecture, field, and movie element for each. Movies with Pizza…mmm. So with Paleontology, I’d have an expert come to lecture about the topic, then a field trip to dig for fossils, then a Jurassic Park movie night where we would break down the topic as presented in the film.

    One I really enjoyed pulling together was for Epidemiology. We had a lecture, then a field trip to the pathology floor at a hospital, and watched Outbreak. Little did I know at the time how much about viruses we’d all come to know now…

  4. I don’t recall there being such things as Science Clubs for fun at university. It was a bit like Mr Miyagi… either you science do โ€œyesโ€ or science do โ€œnoโ€; you either were a science specialist or not, it wasn’t a recreational thing. Recreation was reserved for fencing, polo, croquet, etc. You know what the English are like…

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